-- Scott Swett targets reporting by the Los Angeles Times on the contents of the War Crimes Working Group at the National Archives, showing how the paper avoided mentioning the central fact about Army investigations into the VVAW's atrocity allegations -- that all but one case was dismissed as unsubstantiated or demonstrably untrue.

-- Russ Vaughn discusses ongoing old media efforts to slander veterans, and recalls the 2004 campaign as a time of liberation from the media-constructed prison in which many Vietnam veterans had long languished.

-- WinterSoldier.com presents a remarkable document from the Vietnam War; a Marine Corps handbook on incorporating respect for the Vietnamese people and their customs into the USMC's counterinsurgency operations.

-- A fascinating 1972 government report has emerged from the VVAW FBI files. FreeRepublic.com researcher "Fedora" provides background information on the circumstances, individuals and groups described in the report in his Guide to Contents, Abbreviations, and Names.

-- Researcher and anti-war movement expert Max Friedman takes a detailed look at Kerry's Vietnam-era connections to Abe Feinglass and other American communists who appear to have been working on behalf of the Soviet Union.

-- Medal of Honor winner Lewis Millett served in World War II, Korea, and Vietnam. He writes to express deep concerns about John Kerry's character, his past actions, and his claim to represent Vietnam veterans.

-- Jerome Corsi and Scott Swett analyze the implications of two newly discovered documents showing that the Vietnamese communists guided the American antiwar movement via meetings between the communist delegations to the Paris Peace talks and American antiwar activists. John Kerry and the VVAW were working toward the exact goals set forth in the communist directives.

-- In April of 1971, Swift boat veteran John O'Neill wrote a powerful rebuttal to John Kerry's Senate testimony, but never had the chance to present it. Researcher Max Friedman tells the story Congress and the media tried to bury.

-- From Dec. 1971 to Jan. 1975 Lt Col James Reilley was responsible for monitoring all war crime investigations conducted by the U.S. Army's Criminal Investigation Division. He reports that the Winter Soldier claims were baseless, and that overall, war crimes were few and none were authorized by the chain of command.

-- Steve Pitkin, former member of Vietnam Veterans Against the War, tells in his own words how John Kerry pressured him to give false testimony about war crimes at the Winter Soldier Investigation, and about his recent opportunity to apologize to Vietnam veterans.

-- John Kerry listed the following as evidence of American war crimes before the Senate: free fire zones, harassment interdiction fire, search and destroy missions, and the use of .50 caliber weapons. Operation Iraqi Freedom veteran Cory G. analyzes what these terms actually mean.

-- Dexter Lehtinen gave an abbreviated version of this powerful speech at the Kerry Lied Rally in Washington on September 12. This is the original, delivered at a fundraising dinner for the rally three weeks earlier in Connecticut.

-- Scott Swett tells the story of a former VVAW member and participant in the Winter Soldier Investigation who states that John Kerry and others pressured him to give false testimony about American atrocities in Vietnam.

-- Veteran John Moore takes issue with the previous article, providing evidence that John Kerry was not AWOL from his Reserve obligations, and probably did not violate the Uniform Code of Military Justice.

-- John Boyle reviews how John Kerry and VVAW helped create an image of widespread American atrocities in Vietnam with horrific "testimony" that was oddly lacking in specifics about who, when and where.

-- Dr. Alan Hopewell examines the amazingly persistent Agent Orange myth from a clinical perspective. The Winter Soldier Investigation did its part to popularize the myth with the bizarre claim that the herbicide was a "thalidomide type agent" that was causing widespread birth defects among the Vietnamese population.